Scripture for
meditation: John 19: 25-27
Near the cross of Jesus there stood his mother, his
mother’s sister Mary the wife of Clopas and Mary Magdalene. Seeing his mother
there with the disciple whom he loved, Jesus said to his mother, “Woman, there
is your son.” In turn he said to the disciple, “There is your mother.” From
that hour onward, the disciple took her into his care.
Fr. Robert Barron
tells us: Catholic theology has
drawn a further implication from Mary’s status as Mother of God, namely, her
role as Mother of the Church. If she is the one through whom Christ was born,
and if the Church is Christ’s mystical body, then she must be, in a very real sense,
the Mother of the Church. She is the one through whom Jesus continues to be
born in the hearts of those who believe. This is not to confuse her with the
Savior, but it is to insist on her mission as mediator and intercessor. At the
close of the great prayer the Hail Mary, we Catholics ask Mary to pray for us “now
and at the hour of our death,” signaling that throughout one’s life Mary is the
privileged channel through which the grace of Christ flows into the mystical
body. Here again, the principle of God’s noncompetitive transcendence is
apposite. God is not threatened by his creation. On the contrary, he delights
in drawing secondary causes into the dense complexity of his providential plan,
granting to them the honor of cooperating with him and his designs. The
handmaid of the Lord, who is the Mother of the Church, is the humblest of these
humble instruments – and therefore the most effective. Hans Urs von Balthasar
has argued that the Marian form is the matrix of all Church life and mystery.
He means that her fiat (be it done to
me according to your word) opens up the creaturely space within which God can
work. Mary’s freedom, surrendered utterly to God, becomes the condition for the
possibility of all forms of mission and outreach in the life of the Church. The
Petrine ministry of office, the Johannine ministry of prayer and contemplation,
and the Pauline ministry of theologizing and evangelization – the kingly,
priestly, and prophetic offices, if you will – are all finally reducible to the
Marian form. This is why in much medieval and early modern Christian art Mary
is often depicted gathering all manner of life under her protective mantle.
This is not sentimental piety, but a robust presentation of Mary, the Mother of
the Church (Catholicism: A Journey to the
Heart of the Faith, Fr. Robert Barron, Word on Fire Catholic Ministries, 2011).
My thoughts: The
Catholic Church today is under great attack, just as it has been throughout
history. Caring only to bring all people to Christ, the Church has faithfully followed God's commands and teachings. It has always had opposition, since the world's ways are not necessarily God's ways. How wonderful it is to know Mary, our Mother, is the
guardian of our way. Again, out of his unfathomable mercy, Jesus gave us his
Mother as guardian of the Church. She covers us with her protective mantle, gives
us strength and courage, and reminds us that none of us was put on this earth
to fulfill our own plan, but to fulfill the plan of God. Just as a good earthly mother encourages her children to always have the strength to stand up against the temptation to "be like everyone else" and cave on doing the right thing, Mary encourages the Church leaders to follow her Son and "Do whatever He tells you." Just as Rome and other
self-obsessed civilizations passed away, so, too, will ours. The Catholic
Church, however, has always, and will always, stand firm. With Christ as our
head, and Mary as our Mother, we need never be afraid.
1 comment:
How synergistic! I've been attending a program at Our Lady of Grace here in the South Hills for the past three Thursdays. Title: Catholicism. The program consists of a segment of Fr. Barron's video followed by a discussion period. This past Thursday evening's segment was "Our Tainted Nature's Soltary Boast -- Mary the Mother of God." Exactly what you note in your second paragraph. A most enjoyable evening now reinforced by your notes here. Thank you so very much, Sandy!
Post a Comment